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The Vietnam War. 1955 – 1975. The Early Years. The Vietnamese resisted foreign influence (France, Japan, & U.S.) during World War II. Used guerilla warfare Ho Chi Minh - leader of the communist Vietminh declared Vietnamese independence from France and Japan in 1945
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The Vietnam War 1955 – 1975
The Early Years • The Vietnamese resisted foreign influence (France, Japan, & U.S.) during World War II. • Used guerilla warfare • Ho Chi Minh - leader of the communist Vietminh • declared Vietnamese independence from France and Japan in 1945 • President Truman tried to re-establish French rule in 1950 • Granted $10 million in aid to French in Indochina
1954: French were defeated at Dien Bien Phu • Geneva Accords divided Vietnam at the 17th Parallel (1954) • North: controlled by Ho Chi Minh • South: controlled by anti-Communists: • 1) Bao Dai • 2)Ngo Dinh Diem • U.S. supported Diem
National Liberation Front (NLF): formed in South Vietnam in 1960 • called the Vietcong (VC) by its enemies. • NLF’s goal: unseat the oppressive Diem govt • NLF was gaining support in the south. • President Eisenhower increased the number of American military advisors in South Vietnam • hoped to prop up the anti-Communist south
By 1961, a full-scale war was raging between the North and South in Vietnam
President Kennedy escalated the U.S. involvement • sent war equipment • increased number of advisors by 16,000 • Intended to lead counter-attacks against the Vietcong
The U.S. supported a coup against Diem in Nov. 1963 • CIA felt that Diem had become a liability • Diem led an oppressive government and suppressed Buddhism (major religion in Vietnam) • Severely diminished his popularity • U.S. supported the new leadership. • President Kennedy was assassinated shortly after
Gulf of Tonkin Resolution (1964) • Granted full war-making powers to president, not congress • Resulted from an alleged attack by N. Vietnamese gun boats on U.S. intelligence ship in Gulf of Tonkin • President Johnson used power to move U.S. into full-scale war in Vietnam • also sent additional troops
Opposition to the war heated up following the Tonkin Gulf Resolution. The issues included: • Increased bloodshed • Cost of the war • Ill-defined reasons for U.S. involvement
Tet Offensive (Jan. 1968) • Communist forces launched an offensive against virtually every city in the South • high cost in casualties on both sides • event outraged the American public • turning the tide of public opinion against the war
Johnson declined to run for another term in 1968 • primarily because of the unpopularity of the war • War becomes a stalemate
Nixon’s Vietnam Policy • Vietnamization- a de-scaling of troops without withdrawing support of anti-communist south • U.S. forces replaced by So. Vietnamese troops. • U.S. continued to send supplies and money • The Nixon Doctrine- We will assist, but not send troops.
My Lai Massacre • U.S. troops kill several hundred Vietnamese civilians (women, children, elderly) in small village of My Lai
Nixon orders invasion and bombing of neutral Cambodia • Trying to rid communists who were attacking South Vietnam from within Cambodia • using Ho Chi Minh Trail (a supply line for the Vietcong which ran through neutral countries) • Failed attempt in long run and caused further dissent at home • Students protesting bombing of Cambodia were fired upon by Ohio National Guard at Kent State University in Ohio. • 4 anti-war demonstrators killed; several others wounded
The Closing Years: “Honorable Withdrawal” • Many failed peace talks • Henry Kissinger (U.S. Foreign Policy Advisor) participated in many of talks • Nixon sent Kissinger to negotiate secretly with North Vietnam (Le DucTho) • Wanted to force communists to compromise • Decline of U.S. troops in Vietnam • North Vietnamese troops continued to advance southward • Continued bombing of North Vietnam drew ire of all parties
Paris Peace Agreement (1973) • Negotiated by U.S., North and South Vietnam, and Viet Cong • Provisions: • Withdrawal of troops and swap of prisoners • Removal of foreign troops from Cambodia and Laos • Peaceful unification with democratic elections deciding political future of South Vietnam • U.S. to aid in postwar reconstruction • March 29, 1973 – Last U.S. troops left Vietnam
Broken cease-fire agreement between North and South Vietnam • North launches full-scale invasion of South • U.S. refused to respond with troops • April 30, 1975 – Pull out of Saigon • U.S. embassy in Saigon • Desperate and frenzied exit from Vietnam • Officially ended our involvement there • Soon after U.S. pulled out, all of Vietnam fell to the Communists
Final Statistics • Costs of the War • 58K Americans dead • 300K wounded • $110 -150 billion spent • America re-evaluates role in foreign affairs